Siever L J, Uhde T W, Murphy D L
Psychiatry Res. 1982 Jun;6(3):293-302. doi: 10.1016/0165-1781(82)90019-1.
Clonidine was administered to nine psychiatric patients before and after chronic treatment (3 to 4 weeks) with clorgyline, a selective monoamine oxidase type A inhibitor with antidepressant efficacy. The hypotensive response to clonidine, believed to be mediated by brain alpha 2-adrenergic receptors, was significantly attenuated by chronic but not acute (2 to 3 days) clorgyline treatment, with a time course similar to the onset of its clinical efficacy. This study supports the hypothesis that subsensitization of alpha 2-adrenergic receptors plays an important role in clorgyline's antidepressant effects and may constitute a key contribution to the mode of action of other antidepressant treatments as well.